China to Halt Individual Tourism Permits for Taiwan Amid Rising Tension

China to Halt Individual Tourism Permits for Taiwan Amid Rising Tension
A tourist from China takes a selfie in front of a Taiwanese flag, in Taipei, Taiwan on May 5, 2016. (Tyrone Siu/Reuters)
Reuters
7/31/2019
Updated:
7/31/2019

BEIJING—China will stop issuing individual travel permits for Taiwan to people in 47 mainland cities from Aug. 1, its culture and tourism ministry said on July 31, citing the state of ties with the self-ruled island, but gave no details.

People from the mainland need permission to travel to what Beijing regards as a renegade province. Only travelers from 47 cities, such as Beijing, Shanghai and Xiamen, were allowed to visit Taiwan independently.

Mainland travelers with permits issued before Thursday can follow the original itinerary, but after that date tourists can only go in groups, said China International Travel Service (CITS), a major mainland tour operator.

“We’re aware of the suspension,” said another operator, Shanghai Spring International Travel Service. “Today is the last day to apply for the permit as individuals.”

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council expressed its stern protest and condemnation of the move to China.

“The mainland authorities unilaterally destroyed the agreement without communication with our side,” the panel said in a statement.

“We are not delighted to see the normal tourism and exchange across the Strait were disrupted by political factors.”

In recent years, China has stepped up military drills around Taiwan, including regularly flying what Beijing calls “island encirclement” exercises and sending warships into surrounding waters.

China’s military held exercises this week in waters near Taiwan, following a warning last week that it was ready for war if there was any move towards independence for what Beijing regards as a renegade province.

China, which has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control, also accused the United States of undermining global stability and denounced its arms sales to Taiwan. The United States is Taiwan’s main arms supplier.

The ban comes months ahead of Taiwan’s presidential elections in January. Beijing has long viewed Tsai Ing-Wen with caution since she became Taiwan’s president in 2016, suspecting that she is pushing for the island’s formal independence.

It comes amid a rebound in numbers of mainland tourists to Taiwan, which stood at 1.67 million in the first half, up 28 percent from a year earlier, official data shows.

Last year, 2.69 million mainland tourists visited the island, a drop of 1 percent from a year earlier and a decline of 35 percent from the peak in 2015, data from Taiwan’s Tourism Bureau shows.

In Wenzhou, one of the affected Chinese cities, a female traveller surnamed Yang was annoyed over the ban, as her permit expires in August, but she was not too concerned about cross-Strait ties.

“I went to Taiwan last year, and everyone there was nice.”

By Beijing newsroom, Se Young Lee and Ryan Woo